A Student's Guide to the Study of Law (Guides to Major Disciplines)
M**A
Pocket Mentor
For individuals still in school, the guides offer a sort of compass, enabling them to navigate even the most treacherous curriculum and locate those courses that promise better sailing. For more independent and lifelong learners (whether in school or not), they offer overviews of significant fields of study and suggest suitable readings.It's a great pleasure to observe the way in which powerful and acclaimed minds craft elementary discourses, bringing what they do and why they do it within the ken of the average eighteen-year-old.Additionally, the production quality is high, the books attractive.
D**S
Excellent Book
An excellent book for all conservative scholars, students, and voters. It easily helps you understand the basis of laws, and it helps you understand the moral basis of Constitutional Lawcraft. It pulls (lightly) from some of the works of Justinian all the way to Lon Fuller, and presents a number of examples to argue their points. A must read for any conservative law student.
U**5
Not what I expected
The title should have been "The Evils of a Liberal Court". Would have been nice to hear the other side of the story in their words. Won't buy another Student's Guide. I can hear people's opinions for free.
T**E
Boring!
The book is a slow read and not very interesting. I thought it to be a waste of my time.
C**N
Radical right-wing publisher
This book is published by a radical right-wing organization with a specific political agenda. You can visit their website and look over their long list of trustees, if you don't believe me. They are largely funded by radical right-wingers like Richard Mellon Scaife and the Olin Foundation.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
3 weeks ago